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| |-|Aphrodite, Adonis and Persephone= | | |-|Aphrodite, Adonis and Persephone= |
| | [[File:DTAG - Myth of Adonis Altar.png|thumb|250px|Altar with the Myth of Adonis from South Italy / 425-375 BCE (Classical Greece)]] |
| According to the myth told by Ovid, when Aphrodite met the infant Adonis, she was immediately smitten with him. She decided to take care of him by hiding him in a chest, and asked Persephone, the queen of the underworld, to educate him. However, Persephone also fell in Love with Adonis. | | According to the myth told by Ovid, when Aphrodite met the infant Adonis, she was immediately smitten with him. She decided to take care of him by hiding him in a chest, and asked Persephone, the queen of the underworld, to educate him. However, Persephone also fell in Love with Adonis. |
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| |-|Aphrodite: A Love Story= | | |-|Aphrodite: A Love Story= |
| | [[File:DTAG - Love of Aphrodite and Ares fresco.png|thumb|250px|Love of Aphrodite and Ares, fresco from the house of Marcus Lucretius Fronto in Pompei / 1st. cemt. CE (Roman period)]] |
| In mythology, Aphrodite was the wife of Hephaistos, the god of metallurgy. However, she also had an affair with Ares, the god of war. | | In mythology, Aphrodite was the wife of Hephaistos, the god of metallurgy. However, she also had an affair with Ares, the god of war. |
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| |-|Children= | | |-|Children= |
| [[File:ACOD DT - Children.jpg|right|100px|Terracotta doll (child's toy)]] | | [[File:DTAG - Terracotta Doll.jpg|thumb|250px|Terracotta doll (child's toy) / 5th cent. BCE (Classical Greece)]] |
| After a baby was born, it was presented to the father, who would then decide its fate. If the child was a girl or showed signs of a disability, they were occasionally abandoned and left to die. | | After a baby was born, it was presented to the father, who would then decide its fate. If the child was a girl or showed signs of a disability, they were occasionally abandoned and left to die. |
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| |-|Jason and Medea= | | |-|Jason and Medea= |
| [[File:ACOD DT - Jason and Medea.jpg|right|150px|Jason about the seize the Golden Fleece, stergo of the Argo to the right]] | | [[File:ACOD DT - Jason and Medea.jpg|thumb|250px|Jason about the seize the Golden Fleece, stergo of the Argo to the right / 470-460 BCE (Classical Greece)]] |
| [[Jason]] was the legendary Greek hero who led the [[Argonauts]], a group of adventurers named after their ship, the ''[[Argo]]''. Together, they set out to steal the magical [[Shroud of Eden 1|Golden Fleece]], and eventually succeeded with the help of a sorceress named [[Medea]]. | | [[Jason]] was the legendary Greek hero who led the [[Argonauts]], a group of adventurers named after their ship, the ''[[Argo]]''. Together, they set out to steal the magical [[Shroud of Eden 1|Golden Fleece]], and eventually succeeded with the help of a sorceress named [[Medea]]. |
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| |-|Korinthian Banner= | | |-|Korinthian Banner= |
| | [[File:DTAG - Stater of Korinth.png|thumb|250px|Pegasos flying left, obverse type of a stater from Korinth / 375-300 BCE (Classical Greece)]] |
| The banner of Korinthia was inspired by the coinage of Korinth, which depicts Pegasos. | | The banner of Korinthia was inspired by the coinage of Korinth, which depicts Pegasos. |
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| |-|The Belt of Hippolyta= | | |-|The Belt of Hippolyta= |
| | [[File:DTAG - Amphora scene of Herakles and Amazons.png|thumb|250px|Herakles in combat against Amazons, fighting to capture the belt of Hippolyta, the queen of Amazons. Scene from a black-figure amphora / 520 BCE (Archaic Greece)]] |
| Eurystheas asked Herakles to bring him the belt of Hippolyta for the ninth labor; it would be offered to his daughter Admete. | | Eurystheas asked Herakles to bring him the belt of Hippolyta for the ninth labor; it would be offered to his daughter Admete. |
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| |-|Aphrodite and Salt= | | |-|Aphrodite and Salt= |
| | [[File:DTAG - Salt gathering drawing.png|thumb|250px|Salt gathering in Croisic (France) in the 17th cent. CE. Drawing by Lambert Doomer (1624-1700) / 1645-1646]] |
| Aphrodite, the goddess of love, was born from salty sea foam, and that is why she is sometimes called Haligeneous ("salt-born"). The myth tells us that this foam came from the genitals of Ouranos (the sky). They fell near the island of Kythera, and this is where and how Aphrodite was born. | | Aphrodite, the goddess of love, was born from salty sea foam, and that is why she is sometimes called Haligeneous ("salt-born"). The myth tells us that this foam came from the genitals of Ouranos (the sky). They fell near the island of Kythera, and this is where and how Aphrodite was born. |
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| |-|Hue Variations= | | |-|Hue Variations= |
| | [[File:DTAG - Glass alabastron.png|thumb|250px|Glass alabastron with dark purple nets and zigzags, Eastern Mediterranean / Late 6th-5th cent. BCE (Archaic Greece)]] |
| Different types of murex secrete different types of purple. The purple is influenced by the chemical composition of their sacs, but also their sex and size. Sunlight, temperature, humidity and salinity can also influence the color's brightness, tone, and intensity. | | Different types of murex secrete different types of purple. The purple is influenced by the chemical composition of their sacs, but also their sex and size. Sunlight, temperature, humidity and salinity can also influence the color's brightness, tone, and intensity. |
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| |-|Kytheran Banner= | | |-|Kytheran Banner= |
| | [[File:DTAG - Bronze coin of Kythera.png|thumb|250px|Dove flying right, reverse type of a rare bronze coin of Kythera / 100-50 BCE (Hellenistic Greece)]] |
| Kythera is the name of an island as well as a city. The strategic position of the island - just south of the Peloponnese - made it a target for the Athenians during the Peloponnesian War. Athens occupied it during most of the war and used it to support trade and to raid Lakonia. | | Kythera is the name of an island as well as a city. The strategic position of the island - just south of the Peloponnese - made it a target for the Athenians during the Peloponnesian War. Athens occupied it during most of the war and used it to support trade and to raid Lakonia. |
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